The record-shattering winning streak was over, but the applause wouldn't end. Gophers hockey captain Bethany Brausen couldn't get over the noise pouring down from the crowd of 3,105 at Ridder Arena.
On Nov. 17, her team's comeback had fallen short in a 3-2 loss to North Dakota. A 62-game winning streak that included two NCAA titles and a perfect season was history.
But all the expected sadness and dejection soon dissipated. The pressure was gone — for the players, coaches, fans — and it turned into a celebration. The cheers kept coming, reaching a crescendo as the Gophers did a ceremonial stick salute at mid-ice.
"When I saw how happy people were at the end … I think that's when I knew how big it was," Brausen said.
It was big enough to capture the whole state's attention, especially during March, when the Gophers survived two overtime scares in the NCAA tournament to complete a magical 41-0 season.
When the Star Tribune went to pick its 2013 Sportsperson of the Year, the staff knew this was a team worth honoring. But it was tough picking an individual from a group bursting with talent.
Never before had one team produced all three finalists for the Patty Kazmaier Award, which goes to the top player in women's college hockey. The Gophers not only had the award's winner in 100-point scorer Amanda Kessel, but they also boasted the nation's top goaltender, Noora Raty, and best defenseman, Megan Bozek.
Then there's coach Brad Frost, who won his second NCAA title in 2013 and has this year's team off to a 19-1 start. This season's Gophers barely have skipped a beat even with five players from last year's team training for the Olympics — Kessel, Bozek and defenseman Lee Stecklein for Team USA, and Raty and defenseman Mira Jalosuo for Finland.
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